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[1732.32 --> 1735.00] It's going to be going to be a massive road trip.
[1735.26 --> 1735.76] I mean, we got a lot.
[1735.90 --> 1737.44] August, we got the London meetup.
[1737.82 --> 1742.76] And then in September, we're going to have Oregon, California, JPL.
[1743.00 --> 1744.30] It's going to be great, Alex.
[1744.78 --> 1746.52] JPL is down in LA, right?
[1747.00 --> 1747.20] Yeah.
[1747.36 --> 1747.60] Yep.
[1747.70 --> 1749.24] Just Pasadena area.
[1749.70 --> 1751.04] So the outskirts.
[1751.48 --> 1751.82] Wonderful.
[1752.24 --> 1752.40] Yeah.
[1752.42 --> 1755.70] I'll have to figure out how I'm going to do that in the RV, but we'll get it dialed in.
[1756.42 --> 1759.90] I hear that the best way to do it is Grand Theft Auto style.
[1759.96 --> 1761.00] You just drive through the desert.
[1761.00 --> 1762.90] Real fast.
[1762.96 --> 1765.08] And then you steal a jet plane and then you fly right in.
[1766.30 --> 1767.48] I think that'll work, Alex.
[1767.62 --> 1768.48] I think that's going to work.
[1769.94 --> 1776.42] Visit humio.com slash HCE to ingest and view all of your logs in one place.
[1777.12 --> 1780.86] Humio is a centralized log management and observability platform.
[1781.22 --> 1786.04] The company was founded by developers in Denmark in 2016 as an alternative to legacy logging solutions
[1786.04 --> 1790.50] that make it cost prohibitive to ingest and search data volumes seen in today's IT infrastructures.
[1791.06 --> 1791.88] I have been there.
[1792.12 --> 1795.78] These used to be problems that we spent a lot of effort and money trying to solve.
[1795.78 --> 1800.76] But the real beauty of Humio is that it can take logs from any source and make them usable.
[1801.56 --> 1803.82] You don't need to constantly massage the format.
[1804.12 --> 1805.38] It doesn't need a schema.
[1805.38 --> 1808.80] You just pump them all in there and then you have them when you need them.
[1809.08 --> 1811.00] And of course, the dashboard is great.
[1811.80 --> 1813.48] The platform is really pretty crazy.
[1813.96 --> 1819.84] Humio's index-free architecture means you can ingest over a petabyte of data per day
[1819.84 --> 1822.74] and search that data with sub-second latency.
[1823.44 --> 1828.06] And Humio is up to 80% cheaper than the competing platforms like Splunk or Elastic,
[1828.48 --> 1830.66] thanks to its reduced hardware and computational footprint.
[1830.66 --> 1834.16] But you know the best way to get going with Humio is the Community Edition.
[1835.08 --> 1840.60] Humio Community Edition is the largest no-cost data ingestion offering on the market today,
[1841.06 --> 1845.40] allowing you to ingest up to 16 gigabytes per day with 7-day retention.
[1845.80 --> 1846.86] It's not a trial period.
[1847.36 --> 1848.66] You've got it for the long haul.
[1849.16 --> 1852.64] This is perfect for self-hosters who just want to ingest their home logs
[1852.64 --> 1855.64] and get a single view of everything happening in your environment.
[1856.12 --> 1859.46] Rather than having to go to all the separate places to look from your logs,
[1859.46 --> 1862.26] from every system, every app, every component in your home,
[1862.82 --> 1864.80] Humio gives you the ability to bring it all together
[1864.80 --> 1867.60] and correlate it in one place for easier troubleshooting.
[1868.10 --> 1870.86] I mean, just to give you an example, you can monitor your power consumption,
[1871.00 --> 1873.78] your download speeds, water consumption, your router information.
[1873.90 --> 1876.68] I mean, just basically anything that you can get stats in Home Assistant,
[1877.08 --> 1878.34] well, you could visualize it in Humio.
[1878.88 --> 1880.40] You can also help monitor power consumption.
[1880.86 --> 1882.38] But you know, power consumption, that's huge.
[1882.46 --> 1887.28] In Australia, Humio Community Edition gives one listener full visibility of a solar and power grid.
[1887.28 --> 1891.08] Home Assistant and Node Red, all that data into Humio.
[1891.42 --> 1893.36] He really likes to impress his neighbors with that.
[1893.72 --> 1896.62] His voltage recently dropped from 240 volts to 160 volts.
[1897.16 --> 1899.80] So like, you know, things like the display on your microwave work,
[1900.28 --> 1902.68] but the actual microwave function, that doesn't work.
[1903.22 --> 1904.72] He was able to dig through the logs in Humio,
[1905.14 --> 1905.88] see it on the dashboard,
[1906.20 --> 1908.92] and take action to protect his home computing infrastructure.
[1909.32 --> 1911.02] When it's your hobby, you want it easy.
[1911.10 --> 1912.14] You want it quick and you want it usable.
[1912.56 --> 1913.88] And you don't want it to have to be a job.
[1913.88 --> 1920.26] So get started with Humio Community Edition for free at humio.com slash hce.
[1920.68 --> 1925.54] That's h-u-m-i-o dot com slash h-c-e.
[1927.76 --> 1929.00] What an opportunity.
[1929.26 --> 1932.32] JPL is going to be so, so cool.
[1932.42 --> 1936.42] I really hope you can find a way to meet up with Chris on the way down if you're on the West Coast.
[1936.86 --> 1938.52] I'm going to start looking at flights.
[1938.62 --> 1942.40] I think that could be, I think it could be worth the flight, hey?
[1942.40 --> 1944.40] Oh yeah, that's a special opportunity.
[1944.68 --> 1944.96] Totally.
[1945.30 --> 1946.22] All right, you and I can talk more.
[1946.54 --> 1948.32] I just didn't want to bring it up when you're in the middle of traveling,
[1948.46 --> 1949.44] but we can talk more when you get back.
[1951.02 --> 1952.54] Do I bring the family though?
[1952.90 --> 1954.56] Ooh, that's a tricky one.
[1954.96 --> 1956.44] You know, it's a work trip, quote unquote.
[1956.54 --> 1957.92] So it's a JB work thing.
[1958.04 --> 1958.96] I mean, I don't know, it's up to you though.
[1959.20 --> 1963.50] I'd tell you, the mother-in-law, who we just referenced, is a physicist by trade.
[1964.28 --> 1965.36] So I think she'd be down.
[1965.36 --> 1967.34] I think she's in Raleigh for September.
[1967.72 --> 1971.90] So I think you might have to grease those wheels with the mother-in-law as well.
[1972.90 --> 1974.22] It's already happening.
[1975.04 --> 1975.82] Oh man.
[1976.02 --> 1977.56] So Lawrence writes in,
[1977.62 --> 1981.44] Hey Chris and Alex, I love the show and I'm really looking forward to the UK meetup next month.
[1981.88 --> 1985.18] This is a broader self-hosting question, but with your combined experience,
[1985.18 --> 1987.34] I'm hoping you may be able to point me in the right direction.
[1987.78 --> 1990.42] I'm a solicitor or attorney for those in the US,
[1990.90 --> 1994.38] looking to change careers to the cloud and I'm unsure where to begin.
[1995.46 --> 1997.88] Hey, we should have Fuzzy Mistborn answer this question, eh?
[1997.88 --> 2001.42] Given that he was on just recently and he's in that trade.
[2002.62 --> 2010.30] So as is the way, a Pi was my gateway drug and it sent me down the rabbit hole on what has become quite the adventure learning Linux.
[2010.56 --> 2018.88] I've had offers from a few very expensive training providers purveying various grades of snake oil and supposedly guaranteed jobs.
[2018.88 --> 2023.18] But in keeping with the self-hosting spirit, I'd like to try and do it myself.
[2024.06 --> 2030.58] I'm currently following a couple of Udemy courses and self-studying to get the AWS cloud practitioner certification,
[2031.08 --> 2032.52] along with a couple of others.